Watching the Effects of Gravity. Vestibular Cortex and the Neural Representation of "Visual" Gravity.

Front Integr Neurosci

Laboratory of Neuromotor Physiology, IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation, Rome, Italy.

Published: December 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Gravity plays a crucial role in how terrestrial species, including humans, navigate and interact with their environments, influencing everything from balance to athletic performance through the use of specialized sensors known as graviceptors.! -
  • The brain integrates information from various sensory inputs—such as the vestibular system, vision, and proprioception—across different areas to interpret and represent gravity's effects, helping to resolve conflicting sensory signals.! -
  • This review highlights experimental studies showing that the brain creates an internal model of gravity, transforming physical gravitational feedback into a virtual perception of gravity, which can differ from actual physical conditions, especially in altered environments like tilted screens or weightlessness.!

Article Abstract

Gravity is a physical constraint all terrestrial species have adapted to through evolution. Indeed, gravity effects are taken into account in many forms of interaction with the environment, from the seemingly simple task of maintaining balance to the complex motor skills performed by athletes and dancers. Graviceptors, primarily located in the vestibular otolith organs, feed the Central Nervous System with information related to the gravity acceleration vector. This information is integrated with signals from semicircular canals, vision, and proprioception in an ensemble of interconnected brain areas, including the vestibular nuclei, cerebellum, thalamus, insula, retroinsula, parietal operculum, and temporo-parietal junction, in the so-called vestibular network. Classical views consider this stage of multisensory integration as instrumental to sort out conflicting and/or ambiguous information from the incoming sensory signals. However, there is compelling evidence that it also contributes to an internal representation of gravity effects based on prior experience with the environment. This knowledge could be engaged by various types of information, including sensory signals like the visual ones, which lack a direct correspondence with physical gravity. Indeed, the retinal accelerations elicited by gravitational motion in a visual scene are not invariant, but scale with viewing distance. Moreover, the "visual" gravity vector may not be aligned with physical gravity, as when we watch a scene on a tilted monitor or in weightlessness. This review will discuss experimental evidence from behavioral, neuroimaging (connectomics, fMRI, TMS), and patients' studies, supporting the idea that the internal model estimating the effects of gravity on visual objects is constructed by transforming the vestibular estimates of physical gravity, which are computed in the brainstem and cerebellum, into internalized estimates of virtual gravity, stored in the vestibular cortex. The integration of the internal model of gravity with visual and non-visual signals would take place at multiple levels in the cortex and might involve recurrent connections between early visual areas engaged in the analysis of spatio-temporal features of the visual stimuli and higher visual areas in temporo-parietal-insular regions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8671301PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnint.2021.793634DOI Listing

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